Invasion of the Snakeheads
The voracious "Frankenfish" has turned up in the Potomac River, Lake Michigan and a California lake, sparking fears of an ecological Armageddon. But is the Asian import a monsteror the victim of monster hype?
- By Helen Fields
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2005, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
In southern Florida, a close relative of the northern snakehead, the bullseye or cobra snakehead, has been living for a few years in the canals of BrowardCounty. The fish, which is native to rivers in South Asia and Southeast Asia, can grow to four feet or longer, but there are not yet enough data to know what effect the bullseye snakehead has had or will have on Florida ecology. Courtenay says the fish probably first got into Florida waters through ritual animal release, a common practice in East Asia that some immigrants have continued in their new land. (A study conducted in Taiwan in the 1990s, for instance, found that 30 percent of Taipei citizens— most of them Buddhists—had released animals as part of a prayer.)
Florida is home to dozens of introduced fish. Paul Shafland, a fisheries scientist with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, has worked with invasive fish for 30 years, but he isn’t as troubled by them as most biologists. “We have philosophically, largely determined that exotics are inherently bad, and that’s fine,” he says. But, he adds, some introduced fish might fill up some part of the food web that was previously unoccupied.
In fact, introduced fish are just about everywhere. Rainbow trout, native to the western United States, have been transplanted into cold waters all over the Midwest and East. In the Great Smoky MountainsNational Park, on the border between Tennessee and North Carolina, rainbows have taken over at least 70 percent of the native brook trout’s territory since the 1930s. In the late 1960s, the walking catfish, an Asian species that really can move over land, escaped into the Florida wild. They’ve walked their way into warm waters throughout the southern half of the state, without causing major damage so far, Shafland says.
Lake Michigan, says Philip Willink, an ichthyologist at Chicago’s FieldMuseum, is also infested with nonnative fish. “Out of eight species of salmon here, six are introduced,” Willink says. But, as in the Potomac, some native fish still hang on in the lake, and he says it’s worth fighting new invasions. “We’re just trying to preserve what is left, because once it’s gone, it’s gone.” Since the Lake Michigan snakehead was found in a fairly deep harbor with little vegetation—an unlikely snakehead habitat—Willink surmises that the fish was probably just tossed into the water. Scientists did some electrofishing in the harbor to look for more snakeheads but didn’t turn up any.
The Potomac is not the river it was when George Washington looked upon it from Mount Vernon and made good money selling native shad. Goldfish, carp, channel catfish—none is native to the river. The now-widespread common carp, brought over from Europe, was put in the river in the late 1800s. Carp stir up a riverbed and make the water too cloudy for some other fish. The largemouth bass, native to other U.S. rivers, was introduced into the Potomac in the 1800s. And the blue catfish, a sharp-spined transplant from the Mississippi River basin that arrived in the Potomac late in the 20th century, is a headache for fishery managers now, who fear it could interfere with the commercial fishing of channel catfish—which were introduced from the Mississippi basin decades earlier. Descendants of released pet goldfish flourish in the Potomac, as they do virtually all over the world. But the other introduced species aren’t the point; the native fish are, says Dan Simberloff, an ecologist at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. If the snakehead is different enough from the predators that natives have evolved with, it might drive some natives to extinction. It’s hard to predict what will happen, though. “Most invasive species don’t cause a huge amount of trouble, but some fraction of them do, and we haven’t been too good at predicting that,” he says. About the snakehead, he says, “I’m not optimistic.”
Cliff Magnus is a semiprofessional fisherman (he says he’s been sponsored for the past ten years by “Team Spouse,” a.k.a. his wife, a lawyer), but the attention he got from catching a snakehead last June in a Potomac tributary has brought him sponsors willing to pay his entry fees for bass tournaments. Magnus may have witnessed a seminal moment. He says he saw two northern snakeheads swimming around each other in Little Hunting Creek in late July. The fish were chasing and nipping at each other. The scene, which he described to some fisheries biologists, wasn’t exactly the makings of a Snakehead Terror sequel, but it was definitely ominous. The way the biologists see it, the fish were getting ready to spawn.
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Comments (27)
When did the invasion begin?
Posted by Bob on October 24,2012 | 01:16 PM
I still have the fish I need to have it identified .none of the conservation agents in my area are availiable.
Posted by Kurtis prinster on June 15,2012 | 02:58 PM
I caught one of these fish in the mississippi river north of lock and dam 25 missouri
Posted by Kurtis prinster on June 15,2012 | 02:38 PM
i love the northern snake head
Posted by jay on May 2,2012 | 07:32 PM
I think these fish should be wiped out if they are a threat to other native fish i dont know about you guys but i actually like to fish for bass i dont want to be catching some stupid chinese fish hopefully someone does something bout it
Posted by brandon on May 1,2012 | 02:51 PM
i wanna get this fish cuse its not mean people just get it upset. thats why it trys to bite people thay are slinent invaders but i sitll love fish i will do my best to keep my snakehead safe. thats if the govermint dont takes it.
Posted by anthony on April 26,2012 | 10:17 AM
Snakehead fish aren't dangerous at all. My whole life i have eaten them. they have lived in our field ponds and lakes with no decline of other fish. today they are hardly existing in Goa, India due to chemicals entering water.
I eat the snakehead fish regularly in Thailand, Philippines etc. as a child we used to collect them and put them in bottles. they lived in our well till a few years ago and we drank that well water. today our well waters are polluted.
there is nothing dangerous about the snakehead fish. I am talking about the one which ia in india and south east asia. i think the biggest they grow is about 50 cms not more. You can go to any Thai water lake where people feed them and you can see thousands of them. yes, they can live with very little water and hibernate for half the year during dry season and come out at first rains.
In the photo showing on the net where the snake head fish was caught in Maryland - this is the same snakehead fish i am talking about. I don't think it eats other fish. other fishes thrived as well as this fish in our pond. Chemicals have killed all the native fresh water fish in Goa including the snakehead fish.
the truth was the septic tank and bathwater was coming from the new housing on the hill which eventually killed all of them. the ponds are silted now in our field but there are no snake head fish left. Though quite hardy they could not withstand the chemicals.
The main point is - there was no decline of other fish when this fish inhabited the same space. it is not a horror fish at all. It is a very warm loving fish, just looks ferocious like a bulldog does, but quite harmless. Americans should visit the habitats of this fish.
thailand is the best place to see thousands and thousands of this fish in the lakes and ponds and barbecued too in the markets.
never mind - just go to thailand and see them. And all of Thailands fresh water fish species are intact.
Posted by reiner on December 8,2011 | 12:52 PM
Snakehead was caught in the Appomattox. This is a tributary of the James River which feeds into the Chesapeake Bay.
Posted by gsf on November 12,2011 | 07:31 PM
Any snakehead above 700 grams will yield 2 pieces of great tasting fillet. So stop complaining and just eat them. They aren't all that dangerous to be honest. A good whack on the head with a stick will kill them for sure.
Posted by Nicholas Chin on October 10,2011 | 09:22 AM
I felt awkful when I first heard about the terror of snakehead. This fish is good food in China. They promote healing. As a kid I often saw them in kitchen sink and I pet them as they appeared gentle...you know it's not easy to find living animal in skycrapper city. There are not many of them so they are not cheap. If they can grow as fast as they are said in America I bet poor people in Asia won't be starving. My old nanny told me this fish never die, so its name in Chinese is living fish. And village people keep them in well and they don't need to be fed.
Posted by kk on September 12,2011 | 04:27 PM
you talk about the gar taking on some of these snakeheads? gar compared to snakeheads is like comparing the difference between street drugs you put a person on weed theyll be cool this is the gar...... usually mellow slow to eat very fast not very aggressive however you take the snakeheads its like putting somebody on crack and roid rage at the same time.... they swallow things whole... they are territorial...... insane fish... gar has armor speed and size....... but this battle comes down to numbers and gar cant compete with thousands of angry immigrants if they want to come theyre comin folks cant wait to taste one though or fight one for that matter lol happy hunting
Posted by brandon on April 13,2011 | 01:31 AM
hey what do baby bullseye snakehead look like need to know all over the place south florida .... all in my pond just would like to know
thank you
steve
Posted by steve o on March 31,2011 | 10:04 PM
I found a snakehead today, believe it or not! Thats why I am on this site looking for some more info. I live in Appomattox Va. It was in my minnow trap that the kids always like to stop to look at. In a little creek behind my house.
Posted by Ben Almond on December 9,2010 | 09:35 PM
In Indonesia and Malaysia, fishing guides recommend targeting these things using ducklings as livebait. You can buy the ducklings by the cage and you put a wide-mouthed hook through the webbing in the foot.
Posted by sbe on April 8,2010 | 11:47 PM
Hrm since the snake head show up i want to go fishing for one.. Let see i wouder what would happen if i hook one these monstor snakehead in the potomac what do they fight like how do i catch these since i do not have a boat and look like i be shore fishing and they anit in the pax river but only in the potomac to bad there anit no bull sharks in the potomac that be cool to hook one those while fishing for a snake head.
Posted by David on February 23,2010 | 09:35 PM
i have found a recent snake head in coopers ditch, which is in va. it is about 12 to 18 inches long and about 5 to 10 pounds. it was dead, washed up on the side of the shore.
Posted by on January 29,2010 | 01:39 PM
that fish almost gave me a heart attack
Posted by becky on January 3,2010 | 08:05 PM
its to late to do anything. ok you could let other species go to try and fix the snakehead problem.but you no its gona back fire it always does.what we need to do is get people in check and start teaching them
Posted by matt on November 9,2009 | 09:42 PM
No natural predators? Well not in the US anyways. Here in Thailand, the snakehead does have a natural predator. Its the monitor lizard, as they eat both fish and animal. But I have to say, a fight with a snakehead is much more fun than fighting a largemouth bass. Especially for Channa Micropeltes or the Giant Snakehead. Using a top water lure, you can see the fish rush up to the lure and BAM! if your lure is made of wood, you will see teeth marks on it. Also the first time I ever caught one of these, I've had the rod yanked off my hand just because of the strike. THEY ARE POWERFUL FISH, and one of the most vicious fish in the freshwater. The juveniles in the tank, if you stick a finger in there they will happily try to bite it. And those barracuda-like teeth, I highly doubt an alligator gar will be able to wipe out the entire snakehead population, as snakeheads are extremely fast, much faster than the alligator gar.
Posted by Rog on April 23,2009 | 05:29 AM
aswome
Posted by Shadow Bullard on January 12,2009 | 01:57 PM
I can't think of a better job for the longnose and alligator gar. I hate fish with teeth but gar would/should eat the intruders. Some people who can't spell or think or utter a single intelligible word may find it quite ok to let an alien species completely destroy a habitat but, I see this as an issue that can't be ignored. Find the Snakehead breeder from above and lets feed her to these fish that just might render our freshwater void of any life at all.
Posted by drew on December 25,2008 | 01:05 AM
Snakeheads are cute!!! I have one in my aquarium (channa bleheri) she's called "hanna the channa" and live's well with my other fishes. she eats shellfish which I feed her. why all this bull about elimination and unlegalizin the import? its human that do not respect animals. people should never set tropical or different spieces free in a erea where they don't belong. unlegalizing the import is no selution causse poeple should care for the animals they have chosen to keep and thats the problem. this way even lots of turtle spieces are harmfull for most envirements to. its people who does not realize that so poison them or yourself instead of being the wiseguy in the problem. THE SELUTION IS ADUCATION AND RESPECT FOR ANIMALS(FISH) BEFORE BUYING THEM. HUMANS RESPONSIBILITY CREATED MONTERS!
Posted by ceejay on November 18,2008 | 03:11 AM
They have turned up in the Mississippi River as well. Swimming has been banned in some rivers and lakes because of the Northern Snakehead.
Posted by Anonymous on November 10,2008 | 06:56 AM
No one belivs me when I tell them these fish have made their way to Chicago--or that they exist! Is their a video clip out there???
Posted by Amy on October 13,2008 | 10:39 AM
These snakeheads need to be stopped. i suggest finding something that only eliminates snakeheads a.k.a their weakness other fish shouldn't be affected by it dump there elimination stuff into every pond or lake and to look for every possible import of snakeheads check every immigrant, visitor, etc. please stop these snakeheads
Posted by Kyrinna on September 13,2008 | 07:38 PM
snakehead fish is great fish in asia but not in other part of world..ilike to catch snakehead fish..please visit my blog about snankehead fish in malaysia http://darkartcaster.blogspot.com/
Posted by mizlan on July 30,2008 | 05:14 PM
These snakeheads have now been found in the UK and other parts of the world. So the battle has not been won! Nat Geo Wild has picked up on this story and will be premiering a show about the snakehead invasion on 4th May 2008 in the UK. Check out http://natgeowild.co.uk/fishzilla for more info.
Posted by Victoria Peckett on April 23,2008 | 01:01 PM